4.8 Article

Multi-omic analysis shows REVEILLE clock genes are involved in carbohydrate metabolism and proteasome function

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 190, Issue 2, Pages 1005-1023

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/plphys/kiac269

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Funding

  1. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. Mitacs
  3. Alberta Innovates Campus Alberta Small Business Engagement (AI-CASBE)
  4. Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI)

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This study reveals the significant impact of RVE8-like proteins on plant cell environment through a multi-omics approach. The loss of RVE8-like proteins leads to altered carbohydrate, organic acid, and lipid metabolism, as well as reduced proteasome activity.
Plants are able to sense changes in their light environments, such as the onset of day and night, as well as anticipate these changes in order to adapt and survive. Central to this ability is the plant circadian clock, a molecular circuit that precisely orchestrates plant cell processes over the course of a day. REVEILLE (RVE) proteins are recently discovered members of the plant circadian circuitry that activate the evening complex and PSEUDO-RESPONSE REGULATOR genes to maintain regular circadian oscillation. The RVE8 protein and its two homologs, RVE 4 and 6 in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), have been shown to limit the length of the circadian period, with rve 4 6 8 triple-knockout plants possessing an elongated period along with increased leaf surface area, biomass, cell size, and delayed flowering relative to wild-type Col-0 plants. Here, using a multi-omics approach consisting of phenomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics we draw new connections between RVE8-like proteins and a number of core plant cell processes. In particular, we reveal that loss of RVE8-like proteins results in altered carbohydrate, organic acid, and lipid metabolism, including a starch excess phenotype at dawn. We further demonstrate that rve 4 6 8 plants have lower levels of 20S proteasome subunits and possess significantly reduced proteasome activity, potentially explaining the increase in cell-size observed in RVE8-like mutants. Overall, this robust, multi-omic dataset provides substantial insight into the far-reaching impact RVE8-like proteins have on the diel plant cell environment. Proteomics and metabolite analysis shows that the only known activator transcription factor family involved in the plant circadian clock impacts carbohydrate metabolism and proteasome regulation.

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